That's a very appropriate question.
The objective is 2030, which will be here very soon, especially in the context of infrastructure that's being built under inflationary pressures.
I would note incidentally that we've made investments for the Cree nation in Nunavik. For them, we were able to provide a $200 million investment directly for housing in their community. These are record amounts and investments. However, I'm unaware of the percentages and exactly where it comes from. That has always been the issue between the Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations, the Department of Northern Affairs and Indigenous Services Canada, as well as all those individuals who advocate for safe and affordable housing. There has always been this unfortunate tendency to throw figures around without knowing exactly where the money comes from.
We've recently made considerable progress with our partners, the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, or ITK, the Assembly of First Nations, for AFN, and directly with the communities, in determining what the infrastructure deficit is, particularly with regard to housing. We've had breakthroughs, and we've formed an idea of the amounts involved. And they are enormous.
I will leave it to the Minister of Indigenous Services to discuss that at greater length, but the government as a whole, regardless of political party, must be prepared to make successive investments, year after year, to bridge this enormous gulf between now and 2030. I make no secret of the fact that the challenge is enormous.